| @node ANSI |
| @chapter @sc{gnu} C++ Conformance to @sc{ansi} C++ |
| |
| These changes in the @sc{gnu} C++ compiler were made to comply more |
| closely with the @sc{ansi} base document, @cite{The Annotated C++ |
| Reference Manual} (the @sc{arm}). Further reducing the divergences from |
| @sc{ansi} C++ is a continued goal of the @sc{gnu} C++ Renovation |
| Project. |
| |
| @b{Section 3.4}, @i{Start and Termination}. It is now invalid to take |
| the address of the function @samp{main()}. |
| |
| @b{Section 4.8}, @i{Pointers to Members}. The compiler produces |
| an error for trying to convert between a pointer to a member and the type |
| @samp{void *}. |
| |
| @b{Section 5.2.5}, @i{Increment and Decrement}. It is an error to use |
| the increment and decrement operators on an enumerated type. |
| |
| @b{Section 5.3.2}, @i{Sizeof}. Doing @code{sizeof} on a function is now |
| an error. |
| |
| @b{Section 5.3.4}, @i{Delete}. The syntax of a @i{cast-expression} is |
| now more strictly controlled. |
| |
| @b{Section 7.1.1}, @i{Storage Class Specifiers}. Using the |
| @code{static} and @code{extern} specifiers can now only be applied to |
| names of objects, functions, and anonymous unions. |
| |
| @b{Section 7.1.1}, @i{Storage Class Specifiers}. The compiler no longer complains |
| about taking the address of a variable which has been declared to have @code{register} |
| storage. |
| |
| @b{Section 7.1.2}, @i{Function Specifiers}. The compiler produces an |
| error when the @code{inline} or @code{virtual} specifiers are |
| used on anything other than a function. |
| |
| @b{Section 8.3}, @i{Function Definitions}. It is now an error to shadow |
| a parameter name with a local variable; in the past, the compiler only |
| gave a warning in such a situation. |
| |
| @b{Section 8.4.1}, @i{Aggregates}. The rules concerning declaration of |
| an aggregate are now all checked in the @sc{gnu} C++ compiler; they |
| include having no private or protected members and no base classes. |
| |
| @b{Section 8.4.3}, @i{References}. Declaring an array of references is |
| now forbidden. Initializing a reference with an initializer list is |
| also considered an error. |
| |
| @b{Section 9.5}, @i{Unions}. Global anonymous unions must be declared |
| @code{static}. |
| |
| @b{Section 11.4}, @i{Friends}. Declaring a member to be a friend of a |
| type that has not yet been defined is an error. |
| |
| @b{Section 12.1}, @i{Constructors}. The compiler generates a |
| default copy constructor for a class if no constructor has been declared. |
| |
| @ignore |
| @b{Section 12.4}, @i{Destructors}. In accordance with the @sc{ansi} C++ |
| draft standard working paper, a pure virtual destructor must now be |
| defined. |
| @end ignore |
| |
| @b{Section 12.6.2}, @i{Special Member Functions}. When using a |
| @i{mem-initializer} list, the compiler will now initialize class members |
| in declaration order, not in the order in which you specify them. |
| Also, the compiler enforces the rule that non-static @code{const} |
| and reference members must be initialized with a @i{mem-initializer} |
| list when their class does not have a constructor. |
| |
| @b{Section 12.8}, @i{Copying Class Objects}. The compiler generates |
| default copy constructors correctly, and supplies default assignment |
| operators compatible with user-defined ones. |
| |
| @b{Section 13.4}, @i{Overloaded Operators}. An overloaded operator may |
| no longer have default arguments. |
| |
| @b{Section 13.4.4}, @i{Function Call}. An overloaded @samp{operator ()} |
| must be a non-static member function. |
| |
| @b{Section 13.4.5}, @i{Subscripting}. An overloaded @samp{operator []} |
| must be a non-static member function. |
| |
| @b{Section 13.4.6}, @i{Class Member Access}. An overloaded @samp{operator ->} |
| must be a non-static member function. |
| |
| @b{Section 13.4.7}, @i{Increment and Decrement}. The compiler will now |
| make sure a postfix @samp{@w{operator ++}} or @samp{@w{operator --}} has an |
| @code{int} as its second argument. |
| |
| |
| @node Encoding |
| @chapter Name Encoding in @sc{gnu} C++ |
| |
| @c FIXME!! rewrite name encoding section |
| @c ...to give complete rules rather than diffs from ARM. |
| @c To avoid plagiarism, invent some different way of structuring the |
| @c description of the rules than what ARM uses. |
| |
| @cindex mangling |
| @cindex name encoding |
| @cindex encoding information in names |
| In order to support its strong typing rules and the ability to provide |
| function overloading, the C++ programming language @dfn{encodes} |
| information about functions and objects, so that conflicts across object |
| files can be detected during linking. @footnote{This encoding is also |
| sometimes called, whimsically enough, @dfn{mangling}; the corresponding |
| decoding is sometimes called @dfn{demangling}.} These rules tend to be |
| unique to each individual implementation of C++. |
| |
| The scheme detailed in the commentary for 7.2.1 of @cite{The Annotated |
| Reference Manual} offers a description of a possible implementation |
| which happens to closely resemble the @code{cfront} compiler. The |
| design used in @sc{gnu} C++ differs from this model in a number of ways: |
| |
| @itemize @bullet |
| @item |
| In addition to the basic types @code{void}, @code{char}, @code{short}, |
| @code{int}, @code{long}, @code{float}, @code{double}, and @code{long |
| double}, @sc{gnu} C++ supports two additional types: @code{wchar_t}, the wide |
| character type, and @code{long long} (if the host supports it). The |
| encodings for these are @samp{w} and @samp{x} respectively. |
| |
| @item |
| According to the @sc{arm}, qualified names (e.g., @samp{foo::bar::baz}) are |
| encoded with a leading @samp{Q}. Followed by the number of |
| qualifications (in this case, three) and the respective names, this |
| might be encoded as @samp{Q33foo3bar3baz}. @sc{gnu} C++ adds a leading |
| underscore to the list, producing @samp{_Q33foo3bar3baz}. |
| |
| @item |
| The operator @samp{*=} is encoded as @samp{__aml}, not @samp{__amu}, to |
| match the normal @samp{*} operator, which is encoded as @samp{__ml}. |
| |
| @c XXX left out ->(), __wr |
| @item |
| In addition to the normal operators, @sc{gnu} C++ also offers the minimum and |
| maximum operators @samp{>?} and @samp{<?}, encoded as @samp{__mx} and |
| @samp{__mn}, and the conditional operator @samp{?:}, encoded as @samp{__cn}. |
| |
| @cindex destructors, encoding of |
| @cindex constructors, encoding of |
| @item |
| Constructors are encoded as simply @samp{__@var{name}}, where @var{name} |
| is the encoded name (e.g., @code{3foo} for the @code{foo} class |
| constructor). Destructors are encoded as two leading underscores |
| separated by either a period or a dollar sign, depending on the |
| capabilities of the local host, followed by the encoded name. For |
| example, the destructor @samp{foo::~foo} is encoded as @samp{_$_3foo}. |
| |
| @item |
| Virtual tables are encoded with a prefix of @samp{_vt}, rather than |
| @samp{__vtbl}. The names of their classes are separated by dollar signs |
| (or periods), and not encoded as normal: the virtual table for |
| @code{foo} is @samp{__vt$foo}, and the table for @code{foo::bar} is |
| named @samp{__vt$foo$bar}. |
| |
| @item |
| Static members are encoded as a leading underscore, followed by the |
| encoded name of the class in which they appear, a separating dollar sign |
| or period, and finally the unencoded name of the variable. For example, |
| if the class @code{foo} contains a static member @samp{bar}, its |
| encoding would be @samp{_3foo$bar}. |
| |
| @item |
| @sc{gnu} C++ is not as aggressive as other compilers when it comes to always |
| generating @samp{Fv} for functions with no arguments. In particular, |
| the compiler does not add the sequence to conversion operators. The |
| function @samp{foo::bar()} is encoded as @samp{bar__3foo}, not |
| @samp{bar__3fooFv}. |
| |
| @item |
| The argument list for methods is not prefixed by a leading @samp{F}; it |
| is considered implied. |
| |
| @item |
| @sc{gnu} C++ approaches the task of saving space in encodings |
| differently from that noted in the @sc{arm}. It does use the |
| @samp{T@var{n}} and @samp{N@var{x}@var{y}} codes to signify copying the |
| @var{n}th argument's type, and making the next @var{x} arguments be the |
| type of the @var{y}th argument, respectively. However, the values for |
| @var{n} and @var{y} begin at zero with @sc{gnu} C++, whereas the |
| @sc{arm} describes them as starting at one. For the function @samp{foo |
| (bartype, bartype)}, @sc{gnu} C++ uses @samp{foo__7bartypeT0}, while |
| compilers following the @sc{arm} example generate @samp{foo__7bartypeT1}. |
| |
| @c Note it loses on `foo (int, int, int, int, int)'. |
| @item |
| @sc{gnu} C++ does not bother using the space-saving methods for types whose |
| encoding is a single character (like an integer, encoded as @samp{i}). |
| This is useful in the most common cases (two @code{int}s would result in |
| using three letters, instead of just @samp{ii}). |
| @end itemize |
| |
| @c @node Cfront |
| @c @chapter @code{cfront} Compared to @sc{gnu} C++ |
| @c |
| @c |
| @c FIXME!! Fill in. Consider points in the following: |
| @c |
| @c @display |
| @c Date: Thu, 2 Jan 92 21:35:20 EST |
| @c From: raeburn@@cygnus.com |
| @c Message-Id: <9201030235.AA10999@@cambridge.cygnus.com> |
| @c To: mrs@@charlie.secs.csun.edu |
| @c Cc: g++@@cygnus.com |
| @c Subject: Re: ARM and GNU C++ incompatabilities |
| @c |
| @c Along with that, we should probably describe how g++ differs from |
| @c cfront, in ways that the users will notice. (E.g., cfront supposedly |
| @c allows "free (new char[10])"; does g++? How do the template |
| @c implementations differ? "New" placement syntax?) |
| @c @end display |
| @c |
| @c XXX For next revision. |
| @c |
| @c GNU C++: |
| @c * supports expanding inline functions in many situations, |
| @c including those which have static objects, use `for' statements, |
| @c and other situations. Part of this versatility is due to is |
| @c ability to not always generate temporaries for assignments. |
| @c * deliberately allows divide by 0 and mod 0, since [according |
| @c to Wilson] there are actually situations where you'd like to allow |
| @c such things. Note on most systems it will cause some sort of trap |
| @c or bus error. Cfront considers it an error. |
| @c * does [appear to] support nested classes within templates. |
| @c * conversion functions among baseclasses are all usable by |
| @c a class that's derived from all of those bases. |
| @c * sizeof works even when the class is defined within its ()'s |
| @c * conditional expressions work with member fns and pointers to |
| @c members. |
| @c * can handle non-trivial declarations of variables within switch |
| @c statements. |
| @c |
| @c Cfront: |